Abstract
Background
The COVID-19 outbreak challenges the Spanish health system since March 2020. Some available therapies (antimalarials, antivirals, biological agents) were grounded on clinical case observations or basic science data. The aim of this study is to describe the characteristics and impact of different therapies on clinical outcomes in a cohort of severe COVID-19 patients.
Methods
In this retrospective, single-center, observational study, we collected sequential data on adult patients admitted to Hospital Universitario Quironsalud Madrid. Eligible patients should have a microbiological (positive test on RT-PCR assay from a nasal swab) or an epidemiological diagnosis of severe COVID-19. Demographic, baseline comorbidities, laboratory data, clinical outcomes, and treatments were compared between survivors and non-survivors. We carried out univariate and multivariate logistic regression models to assess potential risk factors for in-hospital mortality.
Findings
From March 10th to April 15th, 2020, 607 patients were included. Median age was 69 years [interquartile range, {IQR} 22; 65% male). The most common comorbidities were hypertension (276 [46·94%]), diabetes (95 [16·16%]), chronic cardiac (133 [22·62%]) and respiratory (114 [19·39%]) diseases. 141 patients (23·2%) died. In the multivariate model the risk of death increased with older age (odds ratio, for every year of age, 1·15, [95% CI 1·11 – 1·2]), tocilizumab therapy (2·4, [1·13 – 5·11]), C-reactive protein at admission (1·07, per 10 mg/L, [1·04 – 1·10]), d-dimer > 2·5 μg/mL (1·99, [1·03 – 3·86]), diabetes mellitus (2·61, [1·19 – 5·73]), and the PaO2/FiO2 at admission (0·99, per every 1 mmHg, [0·98 – 0·99]). Among the prescribed therapies (tocilizumab, glucocorticoids, lopinavir/ritonavir, hydroxychloroquine, cyclosporine), only cyclosporine was associated with a significant decrease in mortality (0·24, [0·12 – 0·46]; p<0·001).
Interpretation
In a real-clinical setting, inhibition of the calcineurin inflammatory pathway, NF-κΒ, could reduce the hyperinflammatory phase in COVID-19. Our findings might entail relevant implications for the therapy of this disease and could boost the design of new clinical trials among subjects affected by severe COVID-19.
Funding
Hospital Universitario Quironsalud Madrid. Own fundings for COVID-19 research.
【저자키워드】 severe COVID-19, SARS-COV-2 infection, immunosuppressants, cyclosporine A, Acute respiratory insufficiency, Hyperinflammation state, 【초록키워드】 COVID-19, Treatment, Glucocorticoids, clinical trial, therapy, Diseases, Mortality, Hydroxychloroquine, Tocilizumab, antivirals, Comorbidities, Diabetes Mellitus, Diagnosis, Comorbidity, C-reactive protein, hypertension, clinical outcomes, Clinical outcome, Cohort, Characteristics, COVID-19 outbreak, male, Patient, Older age, pathway, age, epidemiological, health system, nasal swab, demographic, disease, Admission, RT-PCR assay, funding, in-hospital mortality, boost, retrospective, Inflammatory, Basic science, Odds ratio, observation, risk of death, paO2/fiO2, Non-survivors, Factor, subject, laboratory data, potential risk, multivariate logistic regression, multivariate model, severe COVID-19 patients, single-center, Positive test, significant decrease, tocilizumab therapy, finding, hyperinflammatory phase, COVID-19 research, survivor, Spanish, implication, affected, collected, carried, died, reduce, diabete, baseline, 【제목키워드】 Glucocorticoids, Hospitalized, Antiviral, Tocilizumab, outcome, Cohort, Characteristics, clinical, retrospective, receiving,